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Subject: Why Do India's Dalits Hate Gandhi?

*I*n India, supposedly the worlds largest democracy, the leadership of the
rapidly growing Dalit movement have nothing good to say about Mohandas K.
Gandhi. To be honest, Gandhi is actually one of the most hated Indian
leaders in the hierarchy of those considered enemies of India's Dalits or
"untouchables" by the leadership of India's Dalits.

Many have questioned how could I dare say such a thing?

In reply I urge people outside of India to try and keep in mind my role as
the messenger in this matter. I am the publisher of the Ambedkar Journal,
founded in 1996, which was the first publication on the internet to address
the Dalit question from the Dalits viewpoint. My co-editor is M. Gopinath,
who includes in his c.v. being Managing Editor of the Dalit Voice newspaper
and then going on to found Times of Bahujan, national newspaper of the
Bahujan Samaj Party, India's Dalit party and India's youngest and third
largest national party. The founding President of the Ambedkar Journal was
Dr. Velu Annamalai, the first Dalit in history to achieve a Ph.d in
Engineering. My work with the Dalit movement in India started in 1991 and I
have been serving as one of the messengers to those outside of India from
the Dalit leaders who are in the very rapid process of organizing India's
Dalits into a national movement. The Dalit leadership I work with recieved
many tens of millions of votes in the last national election in India. With
that out of the way, lets get back to the 850 million person question, why
do Dalits hate M.K. Gandhi?

To start, Gandhi was a so called "high caste". High castes represent a small
minority in India, some 10-15% of the population, yet dominate Indian
society in much the same way whites ruled South Africa during the official
period of Apartheid. Dalits often use the phrase Apartheid in India when
speaking about their problems.

The Indian Constitution was authored by Gandhi's main critic and political
opponent, Dr.Ambedkar, for whom our journal is named and the first Dalit in
history to receive an education (if you have never heard of Dr. Ambedkar I
would urge you to try and keep an open mind about what I am saying for it is
a bit like me talking to you about the founding of the USA when you have
never heard of Thomas Jefferson).

Most readers are familiar with Gandhi's great hunger strike against the so
called Poona Pact in 1933. The matter which Gandhi was protesting, nearly
unto death at that, was the inclusion in the draft Indian Constitution,
proposed by the British, that reserved the right of Dalits to elect their
own leaders. Dr. Ambedkar, with his degree in Law from Cambridge, had been
choosen by the British to write the new constitution for India. Having spent
his life overcoming caste based discrimination, Dr. Ambedkar had come to the
conclusion that the only way Dalits could improve their lives is if they had
the exclusive right to vote for their leaders, that a portion or reserved
section of all elected positions were only for Dalits and only Dalits could
vote for these reserved positions.

Gandhi was determined to prevent this and went on hunger strike to change
this article in the draft constitution. After many communal riots, where
tens of thousands of Dalits were slaughtered, and with a leap in such
violence predicted if Gandhi died, Dr. Ambedkar agreed, with Gandhi on his
death bed, to give up the Dalits right to exclusively elect their own
leaders and Gandhi ended his hunger strike.Later, on his own death bed, Dr.
Ambedkar would say this was the biggest mistake in his life, that if he had
to do it all over again, he would have refused to give up Dalit only
representation, even if it meant Gandhi's death.

As history has shown, life for the overwhelming majority of Dalits in India
has changed little since the arrival of Indian independence over 50 years
ago. The laws written into the Indian Constitution by Dr. Ambedkar, many
patterned after the laws introduced into the former Confederate or slave
states in the USA during reconstruction after the Civil War to protect the
freed black Americans, have never been enforced by the high caste dominated
Indian court system and legislatures. A tiny fraction of the "quotas" or
reservations for Dalits in education and government jobs have been filled.
Dalits are still discriminated against in all aspect of life in India's
650,000 villages despite laws specifically outlawing such acts. Dalits are
the victims of economic embargos, denial of basic human rights such as
access to drinking water, use of public facilities and education and even
entry to Hindu temples.

To this day, most Indians still believe, and this includes a majority of
Dalits, that Dalits are being punished by God for sins in a previous life.
Under the religious codes of Hinduism, a Dalits only hope is to be a good
servant of the high castes and upon death and rebirth they will be
reincarnated a high caste. This is called varna in Sanskrit, the language of
the original Aryans who imposed Hinduism on India beginning some 3,500 years
ago. Interestingly, the word "varna" translates literally into the word
"color" from Sanskrit.

This is one of the golden rules of Dalit liberation, that varna means color,
and that Hinduism is a form of racially based oppression and as such is the
equivalent of Apartheid in India. Dalits feel that if they had the right to
elect their own leaders they would have been able to start challenging the
domination of the high castes in Indian society and would have begun the
long walk to freedom so to speak. They blame Gandhi and his hunger strike
for preventing this. So there it is, in as few words as possible, why in
todays India the leaders of India's Dalits hate M.K. Gandhi.

This is, of course, an oversimplification. India's social problems remain
the most pressing in the world and a few paragraphs are not going to really
explain matters to anyones satisfaction. The word Dalit and the movement of
a crushed and broken people, the "untouchables" of India, is just beginning
to become known to most of the people concerned about human rights in the
world. As Dalits organize themselves and begin to challenge caste based rule
in India, it behooves all people of good conscience to start to find out
what the Dalits and their leadership are fighting for. A good place to start
is with M.K. Gandhi and why he is so hated by Dalits in India.

*
Thomas C. Mountain* is the publisher of the Ambedkar Journal on India's
Dalits, founded in 1996. His writing has been featured in Dalit publications
across India, including the Dalit Voice and the Times of Bahujan as well as
on the front pages of the mainstream, high caste owned, Indian press. He
would recommend viewing of the award winning film "Bandit Queen" as the best
example of life for women and Dalits in India's villages, which is the story
of the life of the late, brutally murdered, Phoolan Devi, of whose
international defense committee Thomas C. Mountain was a founding member

-- 
P R A S H A N T.


-- 
Ranjit

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